This article contains a critical review of the provisions in the Dutch penal code regarding group defamation and hate speech. It is argued that not only these provisions themselves but also their application by the Dutch supreme court, constitutes a problem for the legitimacy and functioning of representative democracy. This is due to the tendency of the supreme court to employ special constraints for offensive, hateful or discriminatory speech by politicians. Because such a special constraint is not provided or even implied by the legislator, the jurisprudence of the supreme court is likely to end up in judicial overreach and therefore constitutes a potential – if not actual – breach in the separation of powers. In order to forestall these consequences, the protection of particularly political speech should be improved, primarily by a revision of the articles 137c and 137d of the Dutch penal code or the extension of parliamentary immunity. |
Search result: 20 articles
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Journal | Netherlands Journal of Legal Philosophy, Issue 2 2020 |
Keywords | Freedom of speech, Separation of powers, Criminal law, Hate speech, Legal certainty |
Authors | Jip Stam |
AbstractAuthor's information |
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Journal | Netherlands Journal of Legal Philosophy, Issue 1 2019 |
Authors | Thomas Jacobus de Jong |
Abstract |
In deze bijdrage staat de activiteit van bewijzen in strafzaken centraal. Betoogd wordt dat de vigerende rationalistische opvatting van strafrechtelijk bewijzen eraan voorbij gaat dat het bewijzen zich allereerst voltrekt op een vóór-reflectief niveau. Het primaire blikveld van de mens is namelijk niet het objectiverende kennen, zoals in de rationele bewijstheorieën wordt voorondersteld, maar de praktische relatie tot de wereld. In dit kader wordt eerst de filosofische achtergrond van de rationalistische bewijsopvatting in kaart gebracht, in het bijzonder de invloed van Aristoteles en Descartes. Vervolgens worden de daaruit voortkomende bevindingen aan de hand van ideeën en inzichten die zijn ontleend aan de existentiële fenomenologie kritisch gewaardeerd. Dit leidt tot de uiteenzetting van een hermeneutische opvatting van strafrechtelijk bewijzen. |
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Journal | Netherlands Journal of Legal Philosophy, Issue 2 2017 |
Keywords | ethical hacking, responsible disclosure, positive incitement, negative incitement, intrinsic desirability |
Authors | Karel Harms |
AbstractAuthor's information |
In this contribution, the Dutch government’s acceptance of ethical hacking, by implementing a policy of responsible disclosure, is considered to be a beneficent development. Ethical hacking contributes to cybersecurity and is intrinsically desirable. The term positive incitement is proposed to describe the relatively new phenomenon of encouraging ethical hacking. Positive incitement will be analysed by making a comparison to the Dutch toleration policy regarding soft drugs, and to incitement by law enforcement. Positive incitement should not change into negative incitement, which would result in a serious breach of the rights of ethical hackers. Furthermore, it is argued that the intrinsic value of ethical hacking can justify searching for vulnerabilities in systems of organisations who do not approve of this in advance. |
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Journal | Netherlands Journal of Legal Philosophy, Issue 1 2017 |
Keywords | rechtssubject, natuurlijk persoon, rechtspersoon, staat, orgaan |
Authors | Robert Jan Witpaard |
AbstractAuthor's information |
In dit artikel presenteer ik een nieuwe ‘nominalistische’ theorie van de rechtssubjecten en laat ik zien waarom geen van de tot nu gepresenteerde theorieën de toets der kritiek kan doorstaan. Het artikel valt uiteen in een constructief en een kritisch deel. In het constructieve deel presenteer ik eerst de nominalistische theorie van de rechtssubjecten. Deze theorie richt zich op de persoonlijke elementen van het rechtssysteem en begrijpt rechtspersonen en organen als namen die uitsluitend bestaan binnen het rechtssysteem. In het kritische deel presenteer ik vervolgens een overzicht van de tot nu toe verdedigde theorieën van de rechtspersoon. Het gaat daarbij respectievelijk om de sociaal-biologische of organische leer, de sociologische leer, de sociologisch-juridische leer, de fictieleer en de leer van het (gepersonifieerde) normencomplex. Aan de hand van enkele algemeen geaccepteerde kenmerken van de rechtspersoon laat ik ten slotte zien waarom geen van deze alternatieve theorieën de toets der kritiek kan doorstaan. |
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Journal | Netherlands Journal of Legal Philosophy, Issue 1 2015 |
Authors | Jasper Doomen and Mirjam van Schaik |
AbstractAuthor's information |
In this article, we inquire the merits of criminalizing blasphemy. We argue that religious views do not warrant a separate treatment compared to nonreligious ones. In addition, freedom of speech must be balanced against the interest of those who may be aggrieved by blasphemous remarks. We conclude that penalizing blasphemy is undesirable. It is fortunate, in that light, that acts of blasphemy have recently been decriminalized in The Netherlands by removing blasphemy as an offense from the Criminal Code. Still, other provisions appear to leave enough room to reach the same result, making the removal a possibly virtually aesthetic change. In the international context, it would be regrettable for The Netherlands to forgo the opportunity to take a leading role. |
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Journal | Netherlands Journal of Legal Philosophy, Issue 1 2013 |
Keywords | homo faber, homo agens, human condition, participatory judgment, law-linked justice, existence-linked justice |
Authors | Peter van Schilfgaarde |
AbstractAuthor's information |
This paper concentrates on the dynamic tension between law as it is ‘made’ by legal professionals, functioning as homo faber, and law as it is experienced by citizens, functioning as homo agens. In between those two worlds, law develops as a human condition, a term borrowed from Hannah Arendt. It is argued that, in regard to law development and administration of justice, the function of homo agens should have priority over the function of homo faber. The two basic faculties that connect the two worlds are judgment and speech. This leads to further thoughts on the character of judgment as ‘participatory judgment,’ the function of ‘middle terms’ in legal language and the concept of ‘shared responsibility.’ |
Miscellaneous |
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Journal | Netherlands Journal of Legal Philosophy, Issue 1 2012 |
Authors | Anne Ruth Mackor |
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Journal | Netherlands Journal of Legal Philosophy, Issue 1 2011 |
Keywords | civil procedure, ideology, principles of procedural law |
Authors | Remme Verkerk |
AbstractAuthor's information |
This contribution offers a partial explanation of the differences between procedural systems. In most jurisdictions, civil procedural regulations constitute a carefully designed system. Generally, a number of underlying principles, guidelines, theories and objectives can be identified that clarify and justify more specific rules of procedure. It will be argued that the main differences between legal systems flow from different political and theoretical views of those who determine and shape the form of the legal process. This contribution identifies the ideological influences on the rules of procedure in a number of influential jurisdictions. |
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Journal | Netherlands Journal of Legal Philosophy, Issue 2 2010 |
Keywords | Beccaria, criminal law, nodal governance, social contract |
Authors | Klaas Rozemond |
AbstractAuthor's information |
Les Johnston and Clifford Shearing argue in their book, Governing Security, that the state has lost its monopoly on the governance of security. Private security arrangements have formed a networked governance of security in which the criminal law of the state is just one of the many knots or ‘nodes’ of the security network. Johnston and Shearing consider On Crimes and Punishment, written by Cesare Beccaria in the 18th century, as the most important statement of the classical security program which has withered away in the networked governance of the risk society. This article critizes the way Johnston and Shearing analyze Beccaria’s social contract theory and it formulates a Beccarian theory of the criminal law and nodal governance which explains the causes of crime and the rise of nodal governance and defends the central role of the state in anchoring security arrangements based on private contracts and property rights. |
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Journal | Netherlands Journal of Legal Philosophy, Issue 1 2010 |
Keywords | Legitimation durch Verfahren, criminal law, expert-witnesses, truth, reliability of evidence |
Authors | Anne Ruth Mackor |
AbstractAuthor's information |
Huls has argued that the idea that judges are truth-finders is misleading. In the first part of the paper I put his claim to the test. Against Huls I argue that the aim of procedures in criminal lawsuits is not only to guarantee binding decisions but also to help to find the truth. In the second part of the paper I investigate the role expert-witnesses play in truth-finding. Cleiren and Loth have argued that experts fail to understand the differences between legal and scientific ways of truth-finding. It turns out that Cleiren does not offer an argument for her claim and that Loth’s claim fails too, since it confuses coherence as truth and coherence as epistemic justification. I conclude that legal scholars, rather than experts, fail to understand the nature of legal and scientific truth-finding. |
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Journal | Netherlands Journal of Legal Philosophy, Issue 1 2010 |
Keywords | psychology of law, criminal law, miscarriages of justice, hypothetical reasoning |
Authors | Klaas Rozemond |
AbstractAuthor's information |
In their book De slapende rechter (The sleeping judge) Dutch legal psychologists W.A. Wagenaar, H. Israëls and P.J. van Koppen claim that Dutch judges wrongfully convict suspects in certain cases because these judges generally fail to understand the way hypothetical reasoning works in relation to empirical evidence. This article argues that Wagenaar, Israëls and Van Koppen are basically right in their claim that reasoning on evidence in criminal cases should have the form of hypothetical reasoning. However, they fail to apply this form of reasoning to their own analysis of Dutch criminal cases and the causes of wrongful convictions. Therefore, their conclusion that a form of revision of convictions outside of the criminal law system should be introduced does not meet their own methodological standards. |
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Journal | Netherlands Journal of Legal Philosophy, Issue 3 2009 |
Keywords | law and hermeneutics, law and normativity, one right answer thesis, legal jurisprudence, legal doctrine |
Authors | Prof. dr. Arend Soeteman |
AbstractAuthor's information |
This article is a comment on Carel Smith’s paper. Smith rightly argues that the study of law has a hermeneutic character. But his interpretation of legal hermeneutics includes the thesis that in hard cases there is no right or true legal decision. This seems to have negative implications for the scholarly character of the study of law: in hard cases any solution goes. This paper argues, against Smith, that the study of law defends right answers for hard cases. It is also normative in another sense: legal answers, in easy cases as well as in hard cases, always presuppose a normative interpretation of the legal sources. This contributes to the differences of opinion under lawyers. But it is no obstacle to the scholarly character of the study of law, as long as a rational debate about these legal answers and the underlying values and principles is possible. Smith’s rejection of the right answer thesis, however, prevents the possibility of such a rational debate. |
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Journal | Netherlands Journal of Legal Philosophy, Issue 1 2008 |
Keywords | democratie, idee, model, verkiezing, levering, baattrekking, discriminatie, noodzakelijkheid, voorwaarde, ambtenaar |
Authors | P.B. Hensbroek |
Book Review |
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Journal | Netherlands Journal of Legal Philosophy, Issue 1 2007 |
Keywords | auteur, onderwijs, student, internet, aansprakelijkheid, advocatuur, belofte, downloaden, noodzakelijkheid, openbaar ministerie |
Authors | A.R. Mackor |
Article |
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Journal | Netherlands Journal of Legal Philosophy, Issue 2 2007 |
Keywords | prejudiciële rechtsvraag, vrijheid van godsdienst, openbare orde, discriminatie, gelijkheidsbeginsel, ongelijke behandeling, aanhangigheid, gelijke behandeling, gewoonterecht, handhaving |
Authors | K. Lemmens |
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Journal | Netherlands Journal of Legal Philosophy, Issue 3 2007 |
Keywords | noodzakelijkheid, onpartijdigheid, administratief recht, algemeen belang, burgerlijk recht, fiscaal recht, getuige, homohuwelijk, hulpmiddel, incompatibiliteit |
Authors | P. De Hert and K. Meerschaut |
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Journal | Netherlands Journal of Legal Philosophy, Issue 1 2005 |
Keywords | rechtsstaat, idee, motivering, rechtspraak, erkenning, werknemer, aansprakelijkheid, claim, kwaliteit, noodzakelijkheid |
Authors | M.A. Loth |
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Journal | Netherlands Journal of Legal Philosophy, Issue 3 2004 |
Keywords | rechtsstaat, echtscheiding, democratie, Europees hof voor de rechten van de mens, huwelijk, strafrecht, auteur, geschrift, geweld, idee |
Authors | W. Borst |
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Journal | Netherlands Journal of Legal Philosophy, Issue 1 2003 |
Keywords | rechtsstaat, bestuurder, rechterlijke macht, aanbeveling, fout, ministerie van justitie, aansprakelijkheid, arrangement, handhaving, model |
Authors | N.J.H. Huls |
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Journal | Netherlands Journal of Legal Philosophy, Issue 2 2002 |
Keywords | strafbaar feit, minister van justitie, openbaar ministerie, aansprakelijkheid, staat der nederlanden, strafbaarheid, strafrechtelijke aansprakelijkheid, algemeen belang, gemeente, opschorting |
Authors | N. Rozemond |